The star performed songs from her country-and-more album for the first time during an N.F.L. game, spotlighting her onstage prowess and the contributions of her collaborators.
Beyoncé provided more excitement than either game during Netflix’s NFL debut on Christmas Day. Riding into her halftime appearance on a white horse, the 32-time Grammy winner rocked her hometown Houston crowd in a nearly 13-minute performance on Wednesday.
The show, which came midway through the Baltimore Ravens’ rout of the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium, was designed to entice viewers to Netflix as the streaming goliath inaugurated a new pact with America’s most popular professional sports league.
Beyoncé's halftime livestream during the Ravens-Texans game will be on Netflix in the U.S. for up to three hours after the end of the NFL game.
Ya, ya, it's true: fans turned up the sound on Christmas Day while Beyoncé took the stage during the halftime of the Houston Texans-Baltimore Raven game. The show was the first time she had performed any of the music from her country album,
Don’t fret if you missed Beyoncé’s halftime performance during Netflix’s first-ever NFL Christmas Gameday. Netflix revealed that her performance dubbed “Beyoncé Bowl” will stream as a standalone special later this week.
The set included “16 Carriages” and “Blackbiird” and featured Shaboozey and Post Malone
Beyoncé’s halftime performance at Ravens vs. Texans didn’t disappoint. After a month worth of buildup, Beyoncé took the stage at center field in Netflix’s first-ever Christmas NFL broadast, enterting on a white horse to “16 Carriages,
Beyoncé graciously gifted the world a Cowboy Carter Christmas during the Houston Texans' holiday faceoff with the Baltimore Ravens.
HOUSTON — It was definitely a "Cowboy Carter" Christmas at NRG Stadium Wednesday as H-Town native Beyoncé took the field during halftime of the Texans-Ravens game. Although the Texans lost, fans were still able to witness an epic performance from Queen Bey herself.
Christmas Day on Netflix was supposed to be a showcase moment for Houston, instead it became the equivalent of a curtain call.